Evening Star Newspaper, July 10, 1935, Page 4

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" THE EVENING S TAR, WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY, D. C, JULY 10, 1935. ROOSEVELT PLANG INFORMAL “TALKS" Will Speak on Trip to West Coast—Urges Program Be Pushed. By the Assoclated Press. President Roosevelt is arranging no st speeches for his cross-country trip this Summer to the Pacific Coast, but he sald today that he probably will talk informally at stops along the way. He is making no definite plans for the trip until Congress adjourns. At his press conference Mr. Roose- velt said speed was going to be applied in an effort to conclude the entire legislative program some time in August. He plans to confer ‘tomorrow with congressional leaders on the contro- versial banking bill about to come up in the Senate. There is every indication of gen- eral administration acceptance of the modified bill reported by the Senate Banking Committee, although the President has not given his approval to its provision allowing banks to underwrite securities. Mr. Rocsevelt wants the legislation enacted at this session. Confers With Leaders. Meanwhile, setting aside for the time being the much-discussed topic of friction between the President and the | House, Demceratic legislative leaders sought today to expedite the Roose- velt pragram. The hope they expressed was that | Congress now may adjourn the last | week of August. Leaders in the House talked the situation over with the President for two hours and a half last night. Some of them had gone to the White House for the specific purpose of telling the President of their ideas of why all was not serene around the House. In the aftermath of the House revolt against the President in the utilities fight, they indicated they would try to convince the President he must give | greater consideration to the desires of | members of that chamber. They said there was dissatisfaction among the members because the President had yielded to the Senate on several legis- lative problems, while declining to yield to the House. They also men- tioned patronage troubles, and the complaint that the President failed to listen to the advice of regular House leaders. Grievances Not Mentioned. As it turned out, however, none of these things was mentioned at the White House. Instead. the conferees wound up in a lengthy talk of the best ways to expedite the bills on the President’s program. The only rea- | son given for the omisison of the dis- cussion about dissatisfaction was that 1t took so long to talk about legislation. | Today the leaders were bending every effort to put through the House these bills—the only “must” measures which still lack House approval: The new tax program, on which the Ways and Means Committee Is holding hearings; the bill to outlaw suits for recovery of losses alleged to have been suffered under the gold policy; the Guffey coal stabiliza- tion and Federal alcohol ¢ontrol bills, now awaiting approval by the Ways and Means Committee. The President, of course, reiterated that he expected Congress to finish action on the social security bill, now in Senate-House conference; the utilities holding company bill, on the way to conference; the Tennessee Val- ley Authority amendment, passed by the Senate and up on the House floor today; the omnibus banking and A. A. A amendments bills, passed by the House and pending in the Senate. Other Plans Indefinite. Beyond that, however, he left the Test of the program to the leaders. They interpreted that as meaning that if there were time the Presicent would like to see finally enacted the railroad reorganization, ship subsidy, &nd bus and truck regulation measures. Although last night's White House list included the names of the chair- men of virtually all big House com- mittees, that of Rankin, who heads the Veterans' Affairs Committee, was absent. That of McSwain, South Carolina, chairman of the Mili- tary Affairs Committee, was delib- erately omitted so the intimation would not be drawn that the confer- ence had anything to do with the Ten- nessee Valley Authority bill now nend- ing on the House floor. . GUFFEY BILL RULING DEMANDED BY BYRD Resolution Calls for Opinion by Cummings on Constitu- tionality By the Associated Press. A resolution demanding from At- torney General Cummings an opinion on the constitutionality of the Guffey coal bill was introduced yesterday by Senator Byrd, Democrat, of Virginia. The Virginian, frequent critic of the New Deal, said in a statement that “in passing unconstitutional bills the Congress of the United States 1s simply making a laughing stock of itself.” Cummings earlier had declined to give the Ways and Means group an opinion of the bill's constitutionality. Byrd, in his statement, said he in- Democrat, of | 4 Thomas Corcoran, who told the House Rules Committee today that he was “pretty hot” when Representative Brewster told him he could not vote for the abolition of some holding companies. He is shown as he mopped his brow while being questioned by Representative Lehlach. Chairman John J. O'Connor, protesting that Corcoran and the com- mittee often strayed from what he described as “intimidation charges, also paused momentarily to dry his forehead, ~—Star Staff Photo. Ethiopia (Continued From First Page.) | ! talked also with Dino Grandl, Italian Ambassador to London. An official communique, issued after the gray-haired Avenol’s conversations | with Sir Samuel and Eden, said they “discussed various questions which will be dealt with by the council and assembly of the League of Nations in the near future.” The communique was interpreted | to mean an extraordinary session of | the Geneva councils might be called | before the next regular session in September. Eden subsequently told | the House of Commons all possible plans for promoting peace were being pursued. From Geneva, however, came open | forecasts of war since the breakdown | of the conciliation discussions raised precisely the question of convocation of a special League session—an action held almost certain to lead to Italy’s immediate withdrawal from Geneva. Paris officials reported that “strict neutrality” would be France's policy, reiterating that France would not joim England in any pressure against Pre- mier Benito Mussolini to avert a war. The forthcoming arrival of Margnex C. Martin, new Ethiopian Minister to London, was expected to throw some light on Emperor Haile Selassie's plans. Press Shows Caution. Headlines in the morning newspa- pers reflected general anxiety con- cerning Mussolini’s next move, but al- most complete absence of editorial comment indicated appreciation of the extreme delicacy of the situation. “The decks are cleared for the next | war,” the News Chronicle proclaimed on its first page, asserting: “Only the zero hour is to be fixed.” The Socialist Daily Herald alone took a definite editorial stand, criti- cizing Mussolini in an article headed “Murder for Gain.” ‘This newspaper asserted the issue at stake was not merely the future of tion. “Let’s put it bluntly,” it said. “The Ethiopians have a homeland which the Italians covet. Therefore, the Ital- ians are entitled to murder the Ethi- opians in order to steal their land.” MORE TROOPS ORDERED. Italy Raises Roster of War Machine to 120,000 Men. By the Associated Press. ROME, July 10.—Italy advanced 0 120,000 today its roster of troops designed to drive for an “inexorable” victory over the Empire of Ethiopia. Authoritative sources sald Premier Mussolini’s first cammand, with the break-up of the Italo-Ethiopian con- ciliation Commission, will create two new troop divisions for action in East Africa. The famous warrior poet, Gabrielle d’Annunzio, wrote to Agnostino Laz- zarotto, Fascist federal secretary who troduced the resolution asking the Attorney General's opinion because of the “doubt expressed in high quar- ters as to the constitutionality of the bill.” The bill is designed to stabilize the bituminous coal mining industry and promote its interstate commerce. WORK TRANSFER AGENCY ASKED BY U.S.EMPLOYES New Unit Would Arrange for Placement of Federal Personnel. Creation of a transfer agency for the placement of Faderal personnel dropped from employment was urged last night in a resolution adopted by the Interlodge Committee of the American Federation of Government Employes. Under this plan available jobs and workers would be listed with the es- tablishment The committee also voted to con- tinue to function and went on record in favor of blanketing under civil service all non-civil service employes in the emergency agencies by non- competitive examination has volunteered for African service: “You are going to victory. It is so inexorable—I wish to say fatal—to conquer and to win. The picture ot the new greatness cannot be com- pleted without a real Roman triumph egainst barbarity and against an al- liance of barbarism.” Tells Brand of Defeat. The noted author, whose estrange- ment with Premier Mussolini ended last year when I1 Duce visited him at his villa, told his friend Lazzarotto: “I belong, woe is me, to the genera- tion of Dogali and Adua (where Ethi- opians defeated Italians in 1887 and 1896). I still feel the atrocious brand on my back; a brand which should be canceled and which Il Duce of the new Italy will cancel without delay— ‘against everything and against every- body.’ " Aviation circles said Italy's fighting craft were to be kept ready for any eventuality and that 100 engines have been ordered for the mercantile air force. A government spokesman indicated that the Italian delegates to the com- mission that sought to reconcile dif- ferences with Ethiopia would return soon to Rome. He placed the blame for the indefi- nite suspension of sessions in the Representative Jenuings, Democrat, of West Virginia, was among the speakers at the meetiag, held at the Washington Hotel, A Netherlands by the commission to at- tempts by the Ethiopian represent- atives to take up the question of boun- dary delimitation. & Ethiopia, but the future of clvmza-‘ BY G. GOUL! This is the question into which Status of Quoddy Work Held Cause of ‘Threat’ Inter pretation Lehlbach Says Corcoran’s Position in | ' Negotiations Forced Brewster to Re- gard Remarks as Menace to Pro ject. D LINCOLN. “Did Corcoran threaten Brewster?” | the House Rules Committee today continued to delve at its investigation of charges of administration and power trust lobbying on the public utility holding company bill. | Thomas C. Corcoran, R. F. C. at- torney and the administration's repre- | sentative in the effort to put the hold- | ing company bill through in the shape | desired by President Roosevelt, was on | the stand for cross-examination. Back | of him sat Judge Ferdinand Pecora of | New York, who was counsel for the Senate Banking Committee in its in- vestigation of the Stock Exchange and | later a member of the Securities Com- | mission. Close by was Representative | Ralph O. Brewster of Maine, Repub- | lican, who has charged that Corcoran threatened to halt work on the Passa- maquoddy Dam in Maine because he, Brewster, was not going to vote with the President on the “death sentence” | clause in the holding company bill. Taking Corcoran’s own testimony, Representative Lehlbach of New Jer- sey, Republican member of the In- vestigating Comimttee, sought to show that Brewster was forced to consider Corcoran’s statement to him just be- fore the vote in the House on the “death sentence” clause & threat. | This Passamoquoddy Dam is a $36,- | 000,000 project dear to the hearts of Maine Congressmen. Lehlbach’s Interpretation. Lehlbach rehearsed the testimony of Corcoran, making the following points: | 1. That he, Corcoran, had been des- | ignated by President Roosevelt to | “mop up” all legal questions relating to the Quoddy project. 2. That Corcoran had acquiesced in | the plan to go ahead with the proj- ect—although a bill creating a Maine | “power authority” to handle the elec- | tric power developed at Quoddy hsd; not been passed, although demanded by the Government works adminis- tration. 3. That Corcoran acquiesced in this plan to go ahead with the work after he had received assurances from Brew- ster than he would influence the State Legislature, largely Republican, to pass the power authority bill later, and that he, Brewster, would see to it that no “Republican” or “power in- terest” suits were brought to enjoin work on the project. 4. That Corcoran, after he had be- come convinced that Brewster would not support the “death sentence” clause in the holding company bill, told Brewster he would no longer trust him and his promises regarding the Quoddy project. 5. That the order to proceed with the work at Quoddy was revocable at any time, and that little had so far been done beyond having the Vice President press a button to explode a dynamite charge. “Could Influence Work.” Lehlbach, with all the force he could put into his cross-examination, sought to make it appear that Brew- ster knew Corcoran could influence those in control of the Quoddy project to halt all work until the Maine Legis- Iature could pass the power authority bill. Corcoran denied emphatically that he had any power to halt the work at Quoddy. He insisted that the project had already gotten under way. “It was the logical thing for you to do, when you no longer relied on the promises of Brewster, to tell the Government to stop the work until the Maine Legislature could act, wasn't it?” demanded Lehlbach. Corcoran demurred to this. He sald, however, that he would naturally have advised the Govern- ment to think over very carefully the situation which had developed, since he no longer could rely on the prom- ises of Brewster. “Didn’t you want Brewster to un- derstand that the work on Quoddy might be delayed until the Maine Legislature could act, when you told him you no longer relied on his promises, particularly when it was because of those gromises ) had permitted the plans for work to go ahead?” asked Lehlbach. “No,” said Corcoran. Link to “Death Clause.” Corcoran in his testimony insisted there was really no connection be- tween the Quoddy project and Mr. Brewster's vote on the holding com- pany bill. In Corcoran’s work for the holdlng’ company bill, the testimony devel- oped that he wrote three or four let- ters, which were signed by various members of the House group in favor of the “death sentence” clause, to be sent to other members of the House. It was developed also that at least three meetings of the “group,” which |included Representatives Rankin of Mississippi, Mavewick of Texas, Schnei- der of Wisconsin and Marcantonio of New York, were held and atiended by Corcoran. | Lehlbach pried closely into Corcor- an’s activities so far as they related to the vote of Senator White of Maine, Republican, on the holding company bill. | Both Corcoran and Brewster had testified yesterday that Brewster went to work to persuade him not to vote against the “death sentence” clause. Corcoran told the committee that Senator Wheeler, Senate Interstate Commerce Commit- tee and in charge of the holding com- pany bill, had told him Brewster had said he cculd handle White. “At your suggestion, or with your | acquiescence,” said Representative Lehlbach, “Brewster went to White | to get his vote.” Corcoran denied that he had sent Brewster to White, but admitted that he had talked to Brewster about White. SEAT SALE IS BEGUN FOR SYLVAN THEATER “A Midsummer Night's Dream” | to Be Presented by Commu- nity Players. Reserved seats for the Community Players’ performance of “A Mid- summer Night’s Dream” at Sylvan Theater tonight have been placed on sale at 50 cents each at the Willard and Washington hotels, the A. A. A. ticket bureau and the Community Center office. Chair privilege tickets in the unreserved section are 25 cents. Appearing with the players tonight will be “Ugly,” a dog belonging to Park Policeman P. J. Tierney. The dog was selected for the canine role against plenty of competition in a try-out. and has two understudies, “Scotty.” belonging to Richard Murphy, and “Beny,” the pet of John Dallas. The program tonight opens with a concert by the Army Band at 7:45 o'clock. In case of inclement weather, the play will be held tomorrow night. chairman of the | HUGE GRAIN WAR WAGED BY NORRIS Cash Market Supremacy Involved in Fight of Chi- cago Sportsman. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 10— James E. Nor- ris, Brusque, ready-tcneued giant of sports and business, was embroited in a new battle today. At stake was | control of the Rasenbaum Grain Corp., | and with it, te~hnical supremacy in the cash grain market. The battlefield was the same one in which Norris gained possession of the huge Chicag> Stac.um, sports and ! convention arena cn Chicago's West | Side—the Federal Baakruptey Court. Aligned against the La Salle street veteran of 30 vear; tracing wars were the Continental G.ain Corp., by fact, and by rumor tve Cargill Elevator Co. of Minneapolis and New York and the Roseabaum family, whose gigantic grain nra .est April filed a petition for reorganization under sec- tion 77-B of the naticnal bankruptcy act. OFFICIALS INDORSE PAVING OF TRACKS Montgomery Board Urges Action as Soon as Line Is Abandoned. . By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md, July 10 —The Board of Montgomery County Com- missioners yes‘erday threw is full support behind the proposal to com- plete the paving of Wisconsin ave- nue in Bethesda after the Capital Transit Co. abandons tke electric rail- way operating between Washington and Rockville. ‘The board wrote the State Koads Commission askiag that any available funds be expended to grade and fill the space now ozcuLsed by the elec- tric car tracks, so as tc eliminate im- mediately the serious traffic menace caused by the ditch in which the rails lie. Points to Sentiment. In addition, the hishway body was urged to carry oui tbe work of pav- ing the center of the thoroughfare in the near future, the county board pointing out that sentiment in Be- thesda and adjacert communities is | strongly in favor of the roadway being | surfaced as soon as pessible after the | tracks are abandoned. The board set forth in its missive | that it had heard rumors to the c{-l fect the commissicn is considering building concrete curbs along both | | sides of the railroad's right of way to prevent motorists {rom driving into the gulley. The commissione~s passed an order allowing the propristor of the dump on the East-West Highway near Six- teenth street two weeks in which to remedy an allegedly obtnoxious con- dition caused oy the burning of refuse. Baer (Continued From First Page.) The plane on which Baer was a pas- senger does not stop at Baltimore. Baer explained the false rumor of | his marital rift started when Mary | Kirk Brown, Park Avenue socialite, “happened to drop in” while Baer | and Mr. and Mrs. J. O'Brien were having dinner at a restaurant. “I invited Mary over to have a drink,” Max explained. “Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien were there and Mary stayed for dinner—just a sociable meal among friends. | “Slipped” in Introduction. “The New York papers today even | said I intrcduced Mary Brown as ‘Mrs. Baer.’ I did make that slip, but I explained it later. Yo usee, I'm so used to introducing my bride, the | words ‘this is Mrs. Baer’ slipped out automatically. “I had left my wife at home while I went to New York to attend to ar- | rangements for a radio broadcast. She is a broad-minded girl and under- stands perfectly about the dinner. | “I'm afraid she doesn't understand | newspaper reporters and photograph- | ers so well. For her it's been like she | was on trial. Reporters are always | throwing questions at her and pho- | tographers taking pictures.” Max denied published reports that | he took Miss Brown after dinner to | the new night club which Jack Demp- | sey was opentng. He said the papers | | got him all wrong about that. “Right to Own Religions.” Asked if the fact that he was of Jewish and his wife of Catholic faith | had brought about a misunderstand- ing between them, Baer replied: “After all, we all have a right to our own religion. My wife is a won- derful girl, who understands that my | faith may be somewhat different from hers. | Should Norris, president of th.e Nor- ris Grain Co, .gain approval ot his offer to Federal Judge William H Holly to take over the Roseapaum company, he wouid control s'orage space for additional millions of vushels of grain. Traders said this wculd place Nor- ris in a stragetic pos.tion for neGging . operations and posswliv result m es- tablishing him as one of the Nation's | largest cash grain cperators. Norris was the firct to submit an offer for control of the assets cf the $2,000,000 Rosenbanum Corp. The Con- | tinental Grain Corp. followed with a bid. The Cargill Elevator Co. of Min. neapolis and New York was reported | to be seeking control of the 10,000,000 | bushel Chicago elevator of the North- | western Railroad, leased by the Rosen | baum Corp., and considered the richest | plum in the Rosenbaum assets. The Rosenbaum family has not given up. This week Judge Holly authorized the Chicago Elevator Properties, Inc., a subsidiary of the Rosenbaum Corp., to apply to the | Reconstruction Finance Corp. for a loan of more than $2,000,000. | Norris, the son of a grain dealer of | St. Catherine’s, Ontario, started his| grain career 30 years ago with Richard- son & Co. Five years later he formed his own company and built it into one of the leading cash grain companies in Chicago. Norris was one of the organizers | of the enterprise which resulted in! construction of the Chicago Stadium at a cost of approximately $6,500,000. | When the depression threw the stadium into the bankruptcy courts Norris obtained control of the enter- prise for a reputed $250,000, a fraction | of its original cost. Norris also controls the Olympia arena at Detroit, another huge sport- ing plant and is reported to own an interest in Madison Square Garden— the world's most famous fight stage He is the owner of the Detroit Red | Wings, National League hockey team, | and of the Detroit Olympics in the International Hockey League. Goose for Civil Servants. In response to a protest fsom farm- ers that the export of geese had prac- tically stopped, the government of Latvia has ordered thc famiies of government employes to eat geese, the number depending on the income of the breadwinners. It is estimated that approximatelv 200,000 geese will change hands. ‘Ihe fermers ae re- joicing, but the steady diet of goose | is reported to ao: enthuse the civil | If Your Dentlstl:_!nrts You Try Plate Expert Double < Suction I Guarantee a Perfect Tight Fit in Any Mouth iet_Eay Treatments for_Pyorrhea Extraction 31 and s2 Also Gas Ext. Plates $1.50 Repaired » DR. FIELD Plates $15t0$35 Gold Crowns 406 7th St. N.W. MEt. 9256 “I'm as much in love as I ever was, | and if you ask me 10 years from now, I'll give you the same answer, | “That paragraph in the paper about | my saying our wedding was ‘no go’ | was all wet. Even if it was Lrue.‘ | which it wasn’t, I would have used | | better English than that, bad as my | ! English is.” | | Friends of Baer quoted him as say- | ‘ag he left his wife Monday after lhe; insisted that they be married again | by a Catholic priest. ‘This Baer most emphatically de- nied. He sald he was in a hurry to| | return to New York, because that meant he would be with his bride | again. NEW LOW PRICE Benzol-Blended BETHOLINE REDUCED 1 #a gallon No Change in Quality NOW ONLY 2¢ MORE THAN REGULAR GASOLINES Get a Bargain Tankful Today! Good on lor detois see flyers —conswlt egean. VALLEY FORGE TOURS every Sundey from Philadelphia - $1.00 round trip $2.75 Wilmington Saturday, "I-'l; 13 $7.00 Beston peviome ————— imere $1.25 Eeery Saturday - Sunday $1.50 Daily—Goed for 3 daw Adlantic City Sunday. July 21 $3.25—1-Day Exconion July August 3 Saturdays, gl.!s—wn Excunion 9.25) 2.0y Al-Expense Toun-inclode S“.n}un e, Todging snd 3 mesk. S = $5.65 New York Daily one way, coaches only. Lv. 12.30 au. e i $ Miag Ibfloumfi Trip 16-Day Excu Fri. and Sat. July 19,20, Aus. 2,3,16,17 ALL-EXPENSE TOURS Fats—the SU Lawrosce, Saguesay-Canat T G Lots—Cap G-t Low Roung-Tris Week-End Fare. to all Points PENNSYLVANIA Denies Rift Ex-heavyweight champion, shown as he arrived in the Capital by plane today. En route to Johns Hopkins Hospital to have his hands doctored, Max denied a rift be- tween himself and his bride of less than two weeks. —Star Staff Photo. Bear Injures Children. PERRYVILLE, Ark., July 10 (#).— Slipping its chain, a trained bear rushed a group of children at Thorn- burg, 6 miles south of here, injuring two painfully. John D. Boyet, 2, was cut and scratched about the face, while Doris Powell, 8, escaped with scratches. LYONS CONFIDENT OF TRADE BENEFITS Prime Minister and Wife Leave After Visit to White House. By the Associated Press. Joseph Aloysius Lyons, portly prime minister of Australia, once dubbed “the wild man from Tasmania,” left Washington last night after celebrat- ing Mrs. Lyons' 38th birthday annf- versary, confident he had furrowed the American commercial field for an increased yield in Australian trade While the curly-haired premier of | the commonwealth “down umder was expressing himself as in agree: | ment with the New Deal's foreign trade policies, Mrs. Lyons talked | about her 11 children, who range in | age from “about 20 months” to 18- years. Their names reveal their Irish an- cestry—Desmond, Sheila, Enid, Kath- leen, Moira, Kevin, Brendan, Barry, Rosemary, Peter and Janice. This manifold mother, plump and blond, had seven children when she herself leaped into politics to please | her husband, who was a leader of the Labor party in Tasmania. She finds guiding her large famil: |a pleasant job, althcugh she con- | fessed, “I once thought making littl® | boys’ trousers a terrible job.” The prime minister spoke his op- timistic outlook fcr Australian-Amer- ican trade after tea and dinner with President Roosevelt at the White lHUu\e, an hour's three-cornered dis- cussion of Australian-American af- | fairs with Secretary Hull and Sir | Ronald Lindsay, the British Am- bassador, and courtesy calls on Vice President Garner and Speaker Byrns. The Ottawa agreements, Which grant preferences to British Empire trade, would not, he said, be an ob- | stacle to improved American-Aus- tralian trade, because an agreement could be reached on numercus articles without coming into conflict with the provisions of that agreement. Emphasizing that he had presented no concrete propcsals, the prime min- ister said it was probable that Sir Henry Gullet, Australian minister for trade, would enter into more detailed discussions with American officials in | the near future. 2 o LS . Quench That Sizzling GUARANTEED Djsire With BY WILKINS COFFEE \ WILKINS MIXED or ORANGE PEKOE. You: Dealer Has Both in Individual Packages. Expense-Paid Tours Smooth Your Trip Save Your Dollars ‘These Greyhound Tours, at popular vacation places, range your trip for most en- oy t, least expense. Ho- tel_accommodations, sight- seeing trips, entertainment— all planned in advance! Ask any Greyhound agent sbout pense-Paid Tours to: BOSTON CHICAGO NIAGARA FALLS SHENANDOAH VALLEY NEW YORK CITY ATLANTIC CITY ‘THOUSAND ISLANDS MONTREAL-QUEBEC NEW ENGLAND RAILROAD V s Ve 7104 SUMMER TRIPS OLD MOTHER NATURE is the world’s best air conditioner—when you give her a chance! Rolling over summer highways in a Greyhound bus, the clean fresh air of na- ture sweeps constantly through open windows —cooling, refreshing, bringing relaxation. Millions have found this the most pleasant ‘way to make ALL summer trips—(for Grey- hound reaches all America, much of Canada, Mexican border cities). Easy on the pocket- book, too! Any Greyhound trip saves dollars for extra days at a good hotel, extra entertain~ ment, extra miles of travel. GREYHOUND TERMINAL 1403 New York Ave. N.W. Greyhound Phone: MEtropolitan 1512 Blue Ridge Phone: MEtropolitan 1512 OUND ~ BLUI“LRIDGE (41es

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